Hey guys, I'm taking a break from mini building and painting for a bit, will probably get back to it in December. In the meantime, I did start a Bluesky account if you wanna follow me too!
Wargaming and Miniature Painting blog. Ork player for 20 years, bring back Gorkamorka! Fan of the games Necromunda, Mordheim, Blood Bowl, Tu
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I can confirm that this is accurate. It’s also why I really don’t mind destroying past projects so I can recycle them into new ones!
Yes, making this taught me a lot. No, I don’t like looking at it on my shelf. Yes, I can improve my current project by destroying the old for parts.
Case and point, this baneblade proxy I made with spare parts and jenga blocks. It was fun to make (if time-consuming) and I learned a lot about the properties of different kinds of glue and sculpting from scratch and greebling and making moving parts and so on, but the final product is only “ok” to me. It’s huge, which is fun, but the paintjob is pretty meh and it never really felt finished or polished. I played a game with it which was fun (it took out a titanic chaos knight but then got oneshot by another) and that was all I wanted from it, really.
So yesterday I pulled it apart and put all the salvageable bits back in my bits box :3
Some group shots of the Light Cruisers of Battlefleet Agripinaa as they gather for the fleet muster.
The Light Cruiser element of the Battlefleet comprises of:
2x Dauntless Class with Lances
2x Dauntless Class with Torpedoes
1x Barracuda Class
1x Barracuda Class with Torpedos
Together, they make up a large portion of Battlefleet Agripinaa’s heavy firepower combined with manoeuvrability and fast attack capabilities, and as such are a vital component of the fleet and its ability to defend the Sector from Chaos and Xenos threats.
These were all such a joy to paint and I’m really pleased with how they look together. More pictures of the fleet to come soon!
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Hey Warhammer people, what’s your army? I’m a Black Templars collector, don’t play the game itself and probably never will, but I like having those guys. One day, in the grim darkness of the far future, they may even get painted.
Here’s my castellan I bought and then cleverly tricked my brother in to painting.
54mm leader figure for Celestial Affinity, a skirmish game by Cerberus Studios - plus group pics with the rest of the warband I painted a while back, and a scenic pic using a Jon Hodgson backdrop
So update I have been doing all re-basing which is now near enough complete but while doing it, I thought it would be a good idea to have a another force, one that could either be an ally or an adversary, so I did a roughly 2.5k points of chivalrous kindoms, so out of the one army I can now field 3 at the same time, perfect for teaching different rule sets as well as allowing me to field one massive army for a big game
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Peeling off the broken breastplate of a stoic knight who only fights and never speaks, just to realize there’s nothing in there. Not metaphorically—the armor is literally empty. It doesn’t appear to affect him. If the armor stays mostly in the shape of a knight, he just gets back up to keep fighting. But with the chest plate off he just sits there, equally impervious to curiosity as I reach up into the cavity where his body might’ve gone. Stubbornly, no answers are found anywhere in there.
So I forge him a new breastplate and on the inside, because I know he has plenty of room, I put a little pocket. Not big enough to hold anything functional of course. Just a little extra piece to see what he’ll do with it.
He comes back next time with some grievous injury to his nothing, presumably from the massive shredded gash across his thigh plates. He sits and waits. I fix it for him. He is still nothing in there. I decide to add a drawing on the inside, of the type of beast I imagine could rend metal into scraps with a single blow. He puts it back on. He no longer moves as if he is injured.
Over time the interior of the knight becomes decorated with whatever odds and ends I could think to attach to the inside of a guy who’s got room to carry it. What really gets me is that he never removes any of it. Never requests a change. Not even when I installed a curtain rod for a small tapestry, or a bud vase to carry roses for his beloved, or an accordion folder for letters. He didn’t say a word for any of the many, many drawings of mythical beasts that now fight forever inside of his shell.
There are plenty of other forges. I’m not entirely sure why he keeps coming back here anyway. We’re pretty popular, but he could get his armor fixed a lot quicker (and with fewer ridiculous modifications) literally anywhere else. I asked him if I could get a look at his nothing again. He flipped up his visor and nodded his head so I could take a look. It was the same as it had been, filled with drawings and trinkets and weird little fixtures I’d put in there. I asked if he was annoyed by it, or liked it, or felt anything at all, but he literally only ever says nothing, so I’m not sure why I asked.
There’s not much room left in his nothing now. When he comes back for repairs I’ve had to fix my own foolish additions. Some of these pieces are intricate and irritating to repair, but I fix them anyway. It feels wrong to take any of it away from him now, even though I’ve been rudely encroaching on his nothingness to the point where it’s barely even there. How he squeezes his nothing back into a body so full, I’ll never understand. But it’s a game to me now, finding a spot not yet filled and putting something there. A dark part of me wonders if he ever gets filled up completely, if whatever sorcery holds the nothing-knight together may break, and it will all clatter unceremoniously to the floor.
When he hands me his breastplate yet again, it is so shockingly disfigured that I wonder if being made of nothing has somehow kept him alive. No ordinary knight could sustain such injuries. So I fix it. And he waits, unmoving, in a quiet corner of the forge. It’s like he’s watching, even though I know the reading glasses I put inside his helmet were just for fun. I’m careful to put it all back exactly the way it was when he last left. There’s no room to add more this time.
He examines the breastplate, and pauses before putting it back on, like he’s looking for something. Is he worried about the fit? But it suits him just as it always did. He calmly points to a little space, about an inch, between a miniature shelf and one of many pockets. There’s nothing there. I ask him what’s wrong, and again he points. It’s the most emotion I’ve ever seen from him, and it’s barely anything at all. I take it to mean he wants something there.
I spend some time engraving a little snail in the gap. He watches, as much as nothing can watch. When I’m finished he holds the breastplate, but he doesn’t put it on right away. I ask him if something’s still wrong. He says nothing, and puts it on. I tell him I can’t add anything else. Even if he could ask, there’s no room left.
Next time he comes back, there’s nothing wrong with his armor—he lets me check to make sure. I ask him what he’s doing here. Out from one of many pockets, he retrieves a tiny rusted knife. It’s in miserable condition, barely worth saving. I tell him I could make him a nice new one, but I’ll fix it if he likes. He puts it away and reaches around to find something else, a needle and thread. Better condition, but I’m not a sewist and I tell him as much. He puts them away. He then retrieves a little twisted piece of wax paper. I open it. It’s candy. I ask if I can eat it. He says nothing. I eat it. It’s flavored with cinnamon. I’m surprised he let me take it.
He keeps bringing me candy now. His armor is the most laborious to repair out of every client my forge serves, but it’s my own fault so I can’t complain. Sometimes he keeps me company while I work. I wonder if he is trying to tell me something when he hands me mints. I wonder again at the lemon lozenges. He stares at me when I eat, as much as nothing can stare.
One day he brings me a little jar of honey. I thank him, I tell him I’ll save it for dinner. He watches me work, he puts his repaired armor back on, and he stays. My shift passes slowly, and when I finally pack up to leave it’s dark outside. He follows me out of the forge. I ask him where he’s going. He points to the jar in my hand. I ask him if he wants to watch me eat it. He says nothing, but the nothing-knight clearly wants something, so I open the lid and dunk my finger in the honey. I try not to get any on my chin. He stands there, inches away, watching me try to consume this jar of honey without a utensil. It tastes like clovers. About half the jar is left when I’ve finally had enough of pretending to be a bear, but he doesn’t move to leave.
I ask if he’s going to follow me home. He says nothing. I tell him he can if he wants to. Again, nothing. I start walking, and he follows at my side. I know he’s not going to say anything ever, so I fill the silence. I tell him I’m grateful for the sweets, I tell him about how his various components are made, I tell him I’ve never met anyone made of nothing before. I tell him it’s a rare opportunity for a smith to work so much on the inside of something. He says nothing. I tell him again how much I like the candy.
It occurs to me that maybe filling me with sugar is as close as he can get to filling someone else’s empty armor with trinkets. I’m not sure if that’s really why he does it. I tell him I don’t have room to be filled with anything on the inside, not like him. I’m not a container for much besides food. He offers me another piece of candy. Maybe he likes containing something, the way I like to feel full. Maybe it’s nothing at all.
—
I didn’t edit this even a little bit. Thanks for reading!
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Hey Warhammer The Old World players of tumblr! I've been publishing unofficial rules expansions on my itch.io page, with a couple of big updates in the past few days! If you're interested in rules expansions, narrative scenarios, or new ways to play Warhammer the Old World, check them out!
Adventure in the Old World is a narrative scenario pack of 6 scenarios, which include a battle beneath a meteor shower, a clash in an an avalanche-prone mountain pass, and beseeching a river god.
Storm of Magic Re-Brewed is my largest project yet, an unofficial conversion of the Warhammer 8e Storm of Magic expansion for Warhammer the Old World. So far it only includes the core mechanics, but will be updated to include Mythic Artefacts and Scrolls of Binding.
Warp-Engines of Doom-Death is a Skaven-focused expansion, offering Warhammer the Old World rules for the new Clan Skryre inventions released for Skaven in Age of Sigmar, including new character options, a weapons team, and war machines.
Maniak Miniatures @maniakminis - Tumblr Blog | Tumlook